Join us as we talk about the solar eclipse, abortion, climate change, and more! Guests: Hannah Brimlow, founder of The Moms4Liberty board of directors; Tiffany Justice, founder and editor-in-chief of The Weekly Standard; and Hannah's sister, Tiffany Justice. Thanks to caller Tiffany.
00:00:47.000The craziest thing was, on The View, Sonny Hostin said that the solar eclipse, that cicadas and earthquakes were climate change.
00:01:01.000And that's what many people are watching.
00:01:02.000Now, to be fair, Whoopi Goldberg desperately tried to correct Sonny Hostin, but also didn't know what she was talking about either, so they just sounded all very, very stupid.
00:01:11.000And this is how people are informed, and it's how they vote.
00:01:15.000So we'll talk about that, I guess, because it's the Eclipse Day and, you know, we'll go over that stuff.
00:01:19.000But Donald Trump did release his abortion plan.
00:01:22.000That is, he believes it should be left up to the states.
00:01:25.000The states should pass their own laws on abortion and it shouldn't be a question of the federal government, which has basically pissed everybody off, because now The left is still running the same line they did.
00:01:35.000Oh, they're gonna ban abortion and the conservatives are saying you've given up the fight and you were just giving into independence for no reason.
00:01:42.000So we'll talk about that plus a bunch of other news pertaining to the election and stuff like that.
00:02:07.000People are really seem to love that one.
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00:04:10.000I think we talked about it before the show a little bit.
00:04:11.000He has giant purple welts all over his back.
00:04:13.000Yeah, and like some of these cups, what they do is they stick like a suction on your back, really tighten the suction and let it sit there for like 30 seconds to a minute.
00:04:20.000They didn't move mine, he just put new ones on in different spots.
00:04:24.000And some of the spots, you get it sucked and it's like you feel the juice getting pulled out of something, out of the tendon or the muscle.
00:04:34.000And one thing he told me that was cool, he was like, when you have a tight spot, because my neck was a little tight, when you have one, you've got this fascia, this interconnected, you know, web of muscle in your body, when one piece gets tight, it pulls on the entire rest of the body.
00:04:47.000So he was helping me kind of, if you soar in one spot, it might be other areas that need to be worked on.
00:05:30.000And, you know, we jokingly talked on this show about the plagues of Egypt, like darkness, locusts, whatever.
00:05:38.000I don't think earthquakes is one of them.
00:05:40.000But it seems like she's seriously arguing some kind of pseudo... It's crazy because we can joke about the plagues of Egypt in a religious context.
00:05:49.000They actually have some kind of cult-like pseudo Let me play the clip for you guys.
00:06:31.000All those, all those things together would maybe lead one to believe that, you know, either climate change exists, or something is really going on.
00:06:41.000Not quite so not at the mercy of climate change.
00:08:50.000No, to me, this shows how little they understand about environmental concerns because they're just blaming actually anything that happens outside on the environmental changes, I guess.
00:09:00.000And it makes me think you're like, we always talk about how a lot of millennials say they're not going to have children because of the environment, right?
00:09:07.000This is just becoming an excuse for anything.
00:09:09.000When you don't do your homework, you can start saying, well, the environment.
00:09:55.000I do not believe the government can make earthquakes.
00:09:58.000I believe that you can drop a nuclear bomb on the ground which can create a seismic shock similar to that of an earthquake to a certain degree.
00:10:07.000But I mean, what was it, like a seven point something in Taiwan?
00:10:25.000So I can certainly understand that the government may have access to technologies that we are not familiar with.
00:10:31.000I think a lot of UFOs, or UAPs they call them now, are probably experimental aircraft or something.
00:10:37.000I think in more than one instance we know that is actually the case.
00:10:40.000People are like, oh I saw a UFO, and then it was like, oh actually they were testing some kind of aircraft.
00:10:43.000I don't know for sure, but based on our modern understanding of science, I don't think you could trigger Like, short of maybe, like, fracking?
00:10:53.000Like, a serious endeavor of launching a massive operation of drilling into the ground and injecting frack fluid to create tensions?
00:11:02.000I don't know how you remotely trigger earthquakes.
00:11:09.000vibrating something and he caused a local earthquake in the city and the
00:11:13.000cops came down and were like what are you doing and they shut him down and he
00:11:16.000had to go to this warden he had to leave I'm pretty sure they shut him down after
00:11:19.000that happened so he actually legitimately caused an earthquake and I
00:11:22.000think he's just working electricity and vibration he was like it's not me it's
00:11:25.000climate change yeah and they're like what are you talking about
00:11:55.000They're like, it's an eclipse, it's climate change.
00:11:57.000We predicted this eclipse 50 years ago.
00:12:00.000They were playing from the 70s or whatever, where they're like, that will be the last total eclipse that we'll see, and the next will be in the year 2024.
00:12:08.000And I'm like, that was like 50 years ago they said that.
00:12:11.000Have you ever been in the path of totality?
00:12:13.000I had a little fear of missing out today.
00:12:17.000Part of me was like, gosh, I really should have gone and seen it.
00:12:52.000I think people are fascinated with stars and space and like exploration and but it's when it's so far away it's hard to even it's like out of sight out of mind like if Mars was really close to us we'd be really into it all frequently like people be talking about it want to go there and all that.
00:13:04.000So here's the question I have is the people on the view like Whoopi Goldberg who is a midwit and Sonny Hostin who is a dimwit You know, is that the degree of intellect that Democrats and most Republicans have?
00:13:19.000Or is it that the uniparty establishment are actually intelligent people who want to manipulate stupid people for power?
00:13:29.000Are the people who are behind Joe Biden intelligent and capable of a conversation around what they're doing?
00:13:35.000Or are they just as stupid as the View hosts?
00:13:39.000When I watched like AOC and Kamala Harris, people say like, oh, they're idiots.
00:13:54.000But what's their wisdom level, you know?
00:13:56.000I mean, Sunny, I was sharing, Sunny also said that her son walking down a beach in Florida was yelled at, someone yelled the N-word at him several times.
00:14:25.000There are a big wave of people who go on TikTok and they intentionally film themselves doing things like that.
00:14:31.000And so they're trying to get controversy and clicks because even when you are made fun of on the internet, you can make money off it.
00:14:39.000Maybe I think what she was saying was in the frame of reference of like, you know, America is a very racist country.
00:14:44.000And and that, you know, you could just walk down the beach and be a black person and get yelled at in, you know, especially Florida, right?
00:14:50.000Florida is just, you know, the most transphobic racist state we have, right?
00:15:14.000I don't think anyone at this point knows what climate change or what environmental issues they think they're advocating for.
00:15:20.000Because it's just become this sort of blanket catch-all term for, you know, a problem someone else has created and if I'm Trendy, if I'm socially current, if I'm doing the things that I think will win me attention, I'm saying this word all the time, no matter what.
00:15:37.000I want to pull the carbon dioxide out of the air, turn it into graphene.
00:15:39.000I want to fire an electrolaser into the sun and charge it with hydrogen so we can keep fueling the thing so it doesn't expand and explode and we can keep our solar system stable.
00:15:47.000We have a couple billion years, don't we?
00:16:06.000Or worse, if the earthquakes are caused by carbon, and Ian takes all the carbon for his graphene, then there won't be any earthquakes anymore.
00:16:19.000It's going to have to be stable for a while.
00:16:21.000It's going to have to be stable for a while?
00:16:23.000All right, well, in the meantime, the big news politically is that Donald Trump has announced his abortion policy positions.
00:16:32.000SCNR.com reports Trump's abortion policy position draws criticism from conservatives and liberals.
00:16:39.000Former President Donald Trump Monday's announcement that he supports states' rights on abortion legislation has drawn criticism in equal measure from conservatives and liberals.
00:16:47.000Quote, My view is now that we have abortion where everybody wanted it from a legal standpoint.
00:16:52.000The states will determine by vote or legislation, or perhaps both, and whatever they decide must be the law of the land, in this case, the law of the state.
00:17:01.000The former president acknowledged that states will differ in regard to laws regulating abortion access.
00:17:05.000Quote, Many will have a different number of weeks, or some will have more conservative laws than others, and that's what they will be.
00:17:11.000At the end of the day, this is all about the will of the people.
00:17:13.000You must follow your heart, or in many cases, your religion or your faith.
00:17:16.000Do what's right for your family, and do what's right for yourself.
00:17:19.000Do what's right for your children, do what's right for our country, and vote.
00:17:25.000Trump also said he was strongly in favor of exceptions for rape, incest, and situations that could threaten the life of the mother.
00:17:30.000At the end of the day, it's all about the will of the people.
00:17:33.000That's where we are right now, and that's what we want.
00:17:36.000You know, what's really fascinating is we've talked on the show about whether or not there is a possibility that abortion could be a catalyst for civil conflict in this country the way slavery was.
00:17:48.000Because both are a question of the rights of human life, whether or not they have full rights under the Constitution and sovereign independence, etc, etc.
00:18:00.000Of course, the left argues, well, I guess Democrats argue, as they did with slavery, and once again with abortion, that the subjects of these arguments are not, in fact, deserving of full constitutional rights for whatever reason.
00:18:12.000Now, today, Democrats would say, oh, that's absurd, a zyko, it's not a human, a black person is, therefore it's not the same argument.
00:18:18.000I'm not arguing it's the same thing, I'm saying, back then, you had slavery, and you had the Republican Party, Abraham Lincoln did not say abolish slavery.
00:18:33.000However, he was opposed to the expansion of slavery in the new territories.
00:18:37.000We don't really have new territories right now.
00:18:38.000I mean, look, we have territories, but not really an issue.
00:18:41.000So Trump taking this compromise position is very much similar to what Lincoln did.
00:18:46.000So seeing that, I'm curious as to whether or not abortion could end up being a large catalyst for some kind of upheaval in this country if it does get to it, considering
00:18:56.000no one will, in my opinion, will accept the results of this election. And I think
00:18:59.000Democrats and Republicans, at least who are paying attention, probably agree. But I don't know. What do
00:19:03.000you guys think about Trump's position?
00:19:05.000I think he followed what the Supreme Court said. And I think that, you know, I think we need to do
00:19:38.000You show the story of a child that was born prematurely and was able to grow and thrive in their lifetime and you talk about that child's name.
00:19:48.000I think we just need to show people that a baby born at 29 weeks, what does that baby actually look like?
00:19:56.000I mean, I went and did a town hall for Nikki Haley up in New Hampshire.
00:20:59.000I think Trump made the smart political move, and I believe this will... I don't believe this will earn votes, but I believe it will protect some of the moderate votes that he already has.
00:21:09.000Meaning, independent voters who are like, I'll probably vote for Trump heard this and said, yeah, that's fine.
00:21:13.000Are evangelical voters not going to vote for him because of this?
00:21:15.000They're going to vote for him no matter what.
00:21:17.000There's no way they're voting for Biden.
00:21:18.000And they would rather it be regulated at the state level than federally.
00:21:21.000I mean, I think the thing is, with any pro-life position, if you believe life begins at conception, of course you don't want anybody to have an abortion, right?
00:21:28.000And you believe that any embryo created through IVF is legitimate and deserves a chance at life.
00:21:36.000This is now the opportunity for the pro-life movement, in my opinion, to go campaign at the state level.
00:21:42.000If you believe this, now is your time to win hearts and minds, especially because the legislation is open to conversion.
00:21:47.000Anytime a state convenes their legislative session, If you're a pro-life person you now have the chance to change the abortion laws to be closer to what you'd like them to be.
00:21:56.000When it was at the federal level it was much more difficult and you weren't really able to campaign in the personal way that you were talking about.
00:22:02.000It's much easier to campaign in your neighborhood than it would be to try and be like, everyone in the country pay attention to my position.
00:22:07.000I think conservatives have two big issues here.
00:22:11.000And the first is that their argument has no logical consistency.
00:22:16.000The idea of states determining whether or not, if the conservative position is that babies are being murdered, the idea that they would say you can decide at the state level whether a person can be murdered seems to make no sense.
00:22:26.000The other issue is that conservatives being unwilling to argue their moral position means you will never win that moral position.
00:22:33.000So you've got all these conservatives saying, like, I believe right now it probably is the political decision, the right political move for Trump to say this.
00:22:44.000However, the problem is in the long term, the goal for Trump is we got to win the House, okay?
00:22:50.000He posted on Truth Attacking Lindsey Graham saying he's too absolutist on this one.
00:22:53.000He's going to hand the House to Democrats.
00:22:57.000And that's why I think politically it's the right move.
00:22:59.000However, on the issue strictly of abortion, conservatives have to literally argue.
00:23:04.000If you don't argue, then the only thing anyone hears is you're stripping women of their rights.
00:23:09.000Liberals are arguing ad nauseam, and Republicans are just bowing out and hiding.
00:23:15.000Okay, so then you have a guy who's no idea what's going on, and he sits down, and someone goes, hey, did you hear they want to take women's rights away?
00:23:39.000But I think when you, like, IVF, you create, there's a couple different ways to do it, but you create a batch of embryos, and then the doctor will say these ones, these three of the six, are the most viable.
00:23:48.000But we'll put all of them on ice, and some of them don't survive being frozen.
00:23:52.000At any point a conserver could say, you know, okay, I believe that you have created six children and that you have a moral obligation to see all of these pregnancies through in some manner, you know?
00:24:03.000It would be a more interesting conversation, and you would be able to talk about your morality.
00:24:07.000But instead, they get worried that they're going to offend someone, or be upset if they were to say, left begins at conception, and I think you have an obligation.
00:24:34.000There are time and place for killing, I guess.
00:24:36.000But like, if you could net, neural net, these babies in the womb, little 13-week, maybe like a 30-week or a 20-week child, and somehow they're able to communicate.
00:24:53.000I would immediately get on the do not kill that thing.
00:24:55.000Well, and to that point, there are different charities that will do ultrasounds for people and show them the baby before they abort the baby.
00:25:02.000And once you make that connection, I mean, I've been pregnant five times, had four children.
00:25:07.000Once the first time you see your baby on the ultrasound and you can see your baby moving, I mean, it's just it's a totally different experience.
00:25:14.000And so there's I think to your point, you're right.
00:25:17.000I think we should be talking about the issue more and debating.
00:25:20.000And even even the 15 week debate, to me, is a relevant debate to have.
00:25:43.000And so I just think that in this moment of time where we do have babies that are being aborted later in pregnancies, that we should be willing to at least have the conversation, talk about it in an honest manner with the ultimate goal of ending, you know, abortion, because it is murder.
00:25:56.000I think there is a strong historical precedent that abortion will be made completely illegal.
00:26:02.000It, uh, I don't know exactly how serious violence could get around the issue.
00:26:09.000I think the current form of the conservative pro-life argument, uh, I believe Ali, Ali Batzoki is correct on it's not a pro-life statement.
00:26:20.000I think that's another problem for Republicans in that you can't come out and say this is murdering a baby, but also we think states can choose whether they do that or not.
00:26:29.000And so the argument then for a moderate person is they can't possibly hold that position unless they're hypocrites.
00:26:50.000And I'm like, I'm just thinking about war that when time sanctioned killing is often the right way to go horribly in the history of humanity.
00:27:30.000Alright, I'm saying the only morally consistent position for someone who's pro-life is the Constitution says a person in the United States, you don't have to be a citizen, has inalienable rights and due process rights.
00:27:42.000Let me do this, I love pulling this up, the 14th Amendment.
00:27:48.000Because I believe, uh, the 40th Amendment, let me see if we actually, is it the right one?
00:27:54.000The 40th Amendment, this question needs to be answered.
00:27:57.000Section 1, all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and the state wherein they reside.
00:28:07.000No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or amenities of citizens of the United States, semicolon, nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
00:28:24.000The Supreme Court needs to answer the question, are the unborn persons?
00:28:29.000I'm not saying yes or no to that question.
00:28:30.000I'm saying the only morally consistent position is if you believe babies are human beings, they qualify as not citizens, but at least persons, and they cannot be denied their rights without due process.
00:28:41.000Meaning, under this, if it is to be logically and morally consistent, if a woman wants to get an abortion for any reason under the 14th Amendment, she would have to go to court first.
00:28:52.000I kind of think that they messed this section up.
00:28:56.000Why didn't they say all persons born or naturalized in the United States, etc., down to the third line, nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, but why not say any person born of life, liberty, or property?
00:29:09.000Why did they go from persons born or naturalized to just persons?
00:29:12.000Because they're saying if you're not a citizen of the United States, we can't deprive you of life or liberty.
00:29:17.000Like, you have to recognize the humanity of other people, even if they're not citizens of America.
00:29:21.000That's why we're not like, oh, you're a foreign national, we've arrested, so you get treated completely differently than we treat American citizens.
00:29:26.000So maybe that was their intention, and now people are potentially using this to argue that unborn children are also persons.
00:29:32.000I would argue that the further you go back in time, the higher the likelihood is that individuals viewed unborn babies as persons.
00:29:40.000Oh yeah. 100%. It is only in modern scientific context where you get zygote.
00:29:46.000That's what weirds me out about IVF. And the left says zygotes aren't people.
00:29:49.000Like with IVF, if you're a parent, or you want to be a parent really badly, and you make a bunch of
00:29:53.000it, let's say you make five embryos, and you have two children through that, and you have one or two
00:29:57.000left over, then suddenly those aren't your children. Like, it is weird how much the brain can
00:30:02.000switch this on and off. When you wanted them, they were potentially children, and when you didn't want
00:30:06.000them, they are no longer children. That's bizarre to me.
00:30:08.000They either are or they aren't. That was Or... Or... Yeah, go ahead.
00:30:11.000Or that there are laws where if a woman is pregnant and you commit a crime which causes the death of the pregnancy, you get charged for it as... Right.
00:30:21.000So, I'm not saying I have all the answers.
00:30:24.000I'm certainly saying there is a current political conundrum for Republicans where they fear that if they actually address the moral issue, they will lose.
00:30:33.000That means conservatives publicly are admitting they are in the weak moral position and they are not on moral grounds.
00:30:40.000Like, I don't know how else to put it.
00:30:42.000Unless, maybe that's unfair, and it's conservatives believe people are inherently selfish and evil and would want to kill babies, so there's no point in arguing their position because they'll lose political power by doing so.
00:30:58.000Like, Republicans are saying, we cannot win the argument.
00:31:01.000That's a crazy thought to say about humans.
00:31:04.000Like, until you can prove that these unborn children are actually people, that they actually have some sort of, like, capacity to be a human before they're born, unless you can, like, prove it, there's no real argument to make.
00:31:15.000But this is where all humans ever have come from.
00:31:23.000It's like if you hand me a handful of oak seeds, if you handed me a handful of oak seeds, you wouldn't say, look at all these oak trees in your hand.
00:31:30.000These are seeds that maybe if they're treated right, will one day be an oak tree.
00:31:33.000But it's very different from like an embryo.
00:31:36.000Yeah, you're talking about like an egg.
00:31:39.000So what if the tree is planted and it's sprouted and it's got a little stem?
00:31:42.000It looks good, but if someone steps on it, it's not going to become an oak tree.
00:31:48.000You might argue it has become a sapling, but like an oak sapling, but like when it pokes out of the ground, if you dig your heel into it, you know, it's not going to become the oak tree that you thought it was going to become.
00:31:56.000It's the same thing with these embryos, yeah.
00:31:58.000And if there is a small child, and if a small child is hit by a car, well, they're not gonna be a human, I guess.
00:32:03.000They're never gonna be an adult for sure.
00:32:04.000Only like a quarter of one, to be fair.
00:32:06.000Are you talking about the three-fifths argument?
00:32:41.000The Supreme Court needs to answer the question, are the unborns persons?
00:32:45.000Roe v. Wade was a very feeble attempt at this.
00:32:50.000And there was actually an interesting, I think originally, Because it was actually Roe v. Wade, and there was another case in the 90s, I believe.
00:32:56.000Roe v. Wade, it's been so long since we went over this, but there was basically the, well, before a certain amount of time, it's not capable of surviving on its own, but after a certain amount of time when it is, well, now there's a question of whether it's now obtained personhood rights as it is an independent being capable of surviving on its own.
00:34:42.000Some jurisdictions, or is that a federal thing?
00:34:45.000Different places have different regulations for it.
00:34:47.000But there will be a place where it says, like, baby safe zone.
00:34:49.000I don't want some random woman to go do that tonight thinking that every fire station... It's better than throwing it in a dumpster.
00:34:54.000They look like, like when you go to the library to drop off your books, it's, you put a baby in there, it's because you can put them in there and they're safe, the heating's safe, an alarm goes off in the fire station so that the child isn't left in exposure to die.
00:35:34.000We only got a couple tickets because the earliest showing is four.
00:35:36.000That'd be funny if there was, like a guy on the internet yelling about it.
00:35:39.000I mean, I've been talking about it since 2018, and there's a lot of people who watch the show, so I'd be surprised if they weren't at least aware of the things I've said about it.
00:35:49.000But that doesn't mean they would include a fictional version of a podcast show doing something like this.
00:35:54.000But before we segue up, my final thoughts on this are...
00:35:58.000There is no tenable solution between people saying you are murdering babies and the left saying we have the right to murder babies.
00:36:07.000Like, what I mean by that is, I'm not being cute.
00:36:10.000When the left argues that a woman can abort the baby, At nine months.
00:36:16.000They're literally just saying kill the baby before I can breathe air.
00:36:20.000When the right argues it is always killing a baby, it is of the moral view that life begins at conception and you have no right to do it.
00:36:26.000When the left argues we can abort at nine months, they're arguing they have a right to kill a baby.
00:36:30.000I see this as such a massive moral divide.
00:36:34.000It's, in many ways, worse than the issue of slavery.
00:36:37.000The issue of slavery was that you had to care for the person, and there were certainly abusive and horrible atrocities in the slave trade and everything like that.
00:36:49.000This is a question right now morally of whether to end a life or not.
00:36:53.000So there is a much more serious element to this than there was to slavery, and we're not at the point where... The example I have to bring up is Colorado, which has removed all restrictions, and Oklahoma, which has banned all abortion.
00:37:08.000We're getting into dangerous territory where a woman flees Oklahoma into Colorado, pursued by law enforcement for conspiracy to commit murder, or whatever the law is in Oklahoma.
00:37:19.000I think it was, I don't know what state it was, maybe Alabama?
00:37:28.000Yeah, Alabama will... Let me double check right now, but I think it is Alabama.
00:37:31.000There was one state where they said, a woman plotted an abortion in our state, that's conspiracy to commit a crime, and we will arrest her for this.
00:37:38.000There was a woman who said she called me and she talked to me and she said, here's what I want to do.
00:37:43.000It's not it's just a law they passed right? No, no, there's a specific example. I'm pretty sure
00:37:49.000It's how would they know that you were applauding or they there was a woman who said a woman said she called me and
00:37:55.000she Talked to me and she said here's what I want to do. And I
00:37:56.000said, here's what you do and they said, okay There's a conspiracy now
00:37:59.000Yeah, so they said that's a conspiracy to commit a murder.
00:38:02.000And then other people argued that makes no sense because if it's illegal to gamble in Texas, you drive up to Oklahoma, where they have one of the biggest casinos in the world, nobody charges you with conspiracy to gamble.
00:38:26.000But this is a Serious stark moral contrast where these I don't know how you live in the same world.
00:38:33.000I think you're the Alabama one is there was a law passed that said health care providers could face felony charges for assisting Alabama residents in traveling to other states to obtain legal abortions.
00:38:49.000There was an official from some state, it might have been Mississippi or something, or Missouri, I don't know, saying, we will arrest them for doing this.
00:38:57.000There are similar laws, like Idaho and Washington are really interesting.
00:39:00.000Again, one state has very lax laws and one has very strict.
00:39:04.000And I remember there's a couple different disputes between the two, like one of the governors has said, no, we will absolutely not prosecute women who come from Idaho.
00:39:24.000So this is a story that we brought up last week and we're going to highlight it again because we're talking about, I don't know, the breakdown of social order in this country.
00:39:32.000It is episode 999 of Timcast IRL and there was just a total solar eclipse in this country.
00:39:40.000Ladies and gentlemen, we have here for you the Social Security Administration weekly data for Help America Vote verification transactions by state for the week ending March 30th, 2024.
00:39:49.000That is to say, the latest data coming out of the Social Security Administration on people who are registering to vote who are lacking IDs or dead.
00:41:25.000H-A-V-V, which we're looking at right now, to comply with requirements of Section 303 of HAVA, Social Security Administration developed a new verification system known as the Help America Vote verification in August 2004.
00:41:36.000States must only submit a request to us for new voters who do not present a valid driver's license during the voter registration process.
00:41:46.000HAVV verifies the accuracy of the name, date of birth, and last four digits of social security number submitted and sends an indication of whether our records show the individual as deceased.
00:42:38.000Does that mean that they tried to register, they went to go register, and in the time between when the information was gathered, they died?
00:42:45.000So 4,500 people died who were new voters.
00:43:31.000That's raising any alarm bells for anyone?
00:43:33.000Well, how do you- Did you spell your name wrong?
00:43:35.000Like, how are you not in the Social Security Administration database?
00:43:39.000I mean, I have a double first name and it's always been a problem because, is it a space?
00:43:43.000Some places don't let you have a double first name.
00:43:45.000I could believe that there is a small percentage of errors, but over a thousand seems too high.
00:43:52.000One third of all California residents who registered were named Hannah Clare.
00:43:57.000They're all trying to steal my identity.
00:43:59.000And the problem was, when they were registering and it said Hannah Clare, the people just wrote down Hannah.
00:44:04.000I mean, look, this has been a consistent problem for me.
00:44:08.000It's why I don't recommend double names, at least in America, because some states will not let you put a double name on your license, some won't accept a hyphen, like, it is an issue.
00:44:16.000And so, again, over a thousand seems too high to me, but just, like, I believe that maybe someone did register to To vote and then die.
00:44:24.000I just don't think it's 4,000 of them in Texas.
00:45:12.000Did you guys know that Joe Biden may not be on the Ohio ballot for the general election?
00:45:17.000Like, we are getting crazy close to weird Civil War-esque Let's just call it Echoes.
00:45:24.000Donald Trump didn't- I'm sorry, uh, Donald Trump.
00:45:28.000Abraham Lincoln did not get a single vote in any of the confederates- states that wanted to become confederates.
00:45:33.000And it was because the way it worked back then is that the parties would issue the party ballot of, here's our list of party candidates you should vote for, and then you'd basically sign it and drop it in the box.
00:45:44.000And then it would go, okay, okay, we get it, you're a Republican so you voted for all Republicans.
00:45:49.000In the Confederate States, the Republican Party did not issue any ballots.
00:45:54.000So Abraham Lincoln didn't get a single vote.
00:45:56.000We now have, everyone was talking about Trump being removed from the ballot.
00:46:00.000The issue is in Ohio, the deadline for submitting for the general election is before the Democratic National Convention, where they name their nominee.
00:46:09.000All they have to do is preliminarily, or I guess whatever the word would be, they have to submit that Joe Biden is the nominee before the convention confirming he's the nominee.
00:46:20.000Otherwise, he will not appear on the general election ballot in Ohio.
00:47:09.000So I wouldn't be surprised, based on the weird numbers we're seeing from the Social Security Administration, that come November, when they're counting the votes, they say, Trump won all the swing states!
00:47:21.000All of those California transplants to Texas must have shifted the vote patterns.
00:47:27.000As we know, Beto was pretty close when he was running, and it may be that we have finally seen a big shift because of the California exodus, which of course, everybody knows, there was a major exodus from California and New York into Texas.
00:47:41.000Sure, you can argue those people are more conservative-leaning.
00:47:43.000They'll argue, no, they were Democrat-leaning individuals.
00:48:14.000You've got the polls coming out saying Trump is ahead in all swing states.
00:48:18.000And then you look at the Social Security Administration, and for some reason, there's 1.5 million newly registered voters in Texas who don't have IDs.
00:48:30.000So don't be surprised if this is what happens in, you know, come the end of the year.
00:48:58.000I think considering the swing state polling, look, there's a shadow campaign.
00:49:03.000If you think that they launched a shadow campaign, according to Time Magazine, they did, in 2020, and they're not working on something now, you're nuts.
00:49:25.000And I think what they missed is that while everybody was concerned about the large number of voters with no IDs for some reason, I believe it was us that actually caught, in real time on the show, 23,000 deceased people tried to register in one week!
00:50:30.000What we're seeing is someone's got a DMV database, and someone's got a voter registration database, and they cross-reference and eliminate all duplications, so they only get people on the DMV list who are not registered to vote, and then begin registering these people on their behalf without them knowing.
00:50:48.000And the reason why they don't have IDs is because if you are trying to register as someone else, you wouldn't have their ID.
00:50:56.000Now, I do believe there is another potential issue here.
00:51:01.000Some have said these are illegal immigrants who are getting work permits.
00:51:05.000The interesting thing is that what this website says, the Social Security Administration says, When you register to vote, they submit your paperwork to the Motor Vehicle Administration, which then runs a check to see if you have an ID.
00:51:18.000If you don't, they then kick it to the Social Security Administration.
00:51:22.000I don't know for a fact they do this for every application.
00:51:27.000It may be that if you say, I don't have an ID, they go, okay, no ID, check a box, fill in your last four of your social, and then it bypasses the Motor Vehicle Administration and goes straight to the Social Security Administration.
00:51:38.000However, based on what they say, when you look at it, it says, the state submits the last digit of the SSN name and date of birth to the Motor Vehicle Administration for verification with SSA.
00:51:50.000If that's the case, they say the states are required to verify the driver's license number against the state MVA database.
00:51:55.000It could be that the first thing that happens is the MVA gets the paperwork, sees the name in social, runs it through the system and sees no driver's license, and then says, okay, no ID, send it to SSA.
00:52:07.000If that's the case, then these are people with no IDs for some reason.
00:52:12.000If it's that the MVA doesn't even bother to look up if you have an ID based on your name or social, and it goes straight to the Social Security Administration, then it could be someone is registering tons of people on their behalf secretly.
00:52:25.000Or it could just be that tons of people with no IDs have decided just today to sign up, and then a lot of them die.
00:52:32.000They're dangerous for them to do this.
00:52:35.000Even if the DMV was only sending to the Social Security Administration the registrants that had no ID, having 20,000, having a fourth of them be dead a week later is like, what in the hell's going on?
00:53:45.000You know, I can give you some hypotheses.
00:53:48.000We had on this show a couple weeks ago, or a week or so ago, a conversation as to what would happen with, the story was that These illegal immigrants, criminal aliens, attacked National Guard troops, Texas National Guard, at the border to storm their way into the country.
00:54:05.000And my fear is that when the right sees this, and the aftermath was that the National Guard were attacked, the people were arrested, and then immediately released into this country on their own recognizance.
00:54:19.000And I'm like, wow, this could be the catalyst where red states and cities and Republicans say there is no longer a United States government.
00:54:28.000There is only the Enclave, a rogue faction of people with guns and the people who are willing to listen to them.
00:54:34.000Because if our National Guard could be attacked by an outside group of invaders wearing masks and they were armed, these guys had weapons.
00:55:26.000And so this is a guy who, a non-citizen, a foreign individual from another country, illegally entered his property.
00:55:34.000Was found dead, and they're arresting and charging him for murder.
00:55:37.000At a certain point, you're going to get a group of guys who are going to say, okay, the government's not only not going to protect us, they're going to try and kill us.
00:55:43.000And what happens when these guys then go out and set up checkpoints, when they go out and set up barricades around their town or neighborhood and say, we don't recognize this government anymore.
00:55:53.000Now, the interesting thing on the show was that I was told at the time by the guest that it was not possible, it could never happen.
00:55:58.000It would never happen that individuals in this country would stop believing in the power of government, and if they ever did, the government would quickly come in and just shut them down.
00:56:35.000There's a video of a guy in his car, they're banging on the car, one guy jumps through his sunroof, and he's cowering with his hands up like, please don't hurt me, please, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
00:56:44.000They rip him from his vehicle, take and start spinning donuts on the bridge.
00:57:09.000This is exactly what I'm talking about.
00:57:11.000When people start believing that there is no governing authority, and they have no fear for police, either because the police are impotent and unable to do anything, or they just feel that they can fight back, and there's no more monopoly on violence, they'll take whatever they want.
00:57:28.000Conservatives don't behave the same way urban... I don't know what you would describe these people as, I don't know, rogue actors, criminals, gangs, or whatever.
00:57:36.000We saw this with the far left already back in 2020 when they literally took over city blocks in numerous cities and created their own autonomous zones.
00:57:46.000My fear is we are moving towards, especially after this election, an instance where conservatives start behaving in a similar but different way.
00:57:55.000Similar in that they too decide, you know what?
00:57:58.000Maybe these gangs in San Francisco and Chicago, maybe they're right.
00:58:08.000There's a gang that sends agents from DC to attack people, but there's not that many of them.
00:58:14.000Nationally, with 327 million people, none of these people who took over a bridge that believes a federal crime have any fear whatsoever as to what could happen to them.
00:59:23.000And they laugh and they say, you got 10 seconds to turn around.
00:59:26.000The right will act very differently to the way the left does.
00:59:28.000We saw this with, like, the Bundy standoff, where you actually had a... There's a photo of a guy pointing a rifle down, looking over from the bridge.
00:59:37.000My fear is that... I mean, this stuff out of San Francisco is just absolutely insane.
00:59:43.000People around the world can see that there is no more social order in this country.
00:59:49.000I mean, to weaken America to the point where, you know, world government looks, I guess, appealing because we just can't handle ourselves anymore.
00:59:57.000But what happens when the right adopts the same lack of confidence?
01:00:05.000You don't think that exists right now?
01:00:20.000While Republicans are screaming and begging for Congress, you've got elements of the left firebombing buildings, killing people in the streets.
01:00:44.000How can a police department stop 3,000 people who have taken over a street.
01:00:50.000I was thinking in this situation, if you, I don't know how long it takes for the National Guard to spin up, but you block the bridge on both sides, you have all your guns pointed at the bridge from all angles, you maybe even bring a tank out, but then what would that do?
01:01:07.000Cause I was like, this crowd is rowdy.
01:01:08.000They might charge the people, like run at them.
01:01:10.000You'd have to bring in, I don't know what, 20 city buses to load them all up in cuffs with cops on each one, and then where do you put them?
01:02:03.000I was just thinking about in all the video games I played over the years where you have a piss poor leader and then your country's the country's a piss poor leaders to start having revolutions and riots and I'm like why do they lose the people lose loyalty when the when the leader is terrible like the impotence of Joe Biden to step up to put some authority behind like the protection of its citizens is like it's and Trump did the same thing during these riots like after George Floyd died.
01:02:31.000He waited and waited and it got worse and worse.
01:02:33.000And it's like, I know you don't want to seem like a fascist dictator that you're the one that's blamed for the national... Four dead in Ohio.
01:02:48.000No one wants to have their name on that.
01:02:50.000But at the same time, if you do nothing, it gets bigger, and then it gets bigger, and they take a little, and then they take a little, and then all of a sudden you've got an actual revolution.
01:02:57.000So you need to do something to stop this.
01:03:00.000My concern is that the only faction of people in this country right now who actually believe it exists are Trump supporters.
01:03:36.000They're teaching our children to hate this country.
01:03:38.000Then you have roving gangs of people who don't care whether it does or doesn't.
01:03:41.000And then you have Trump supporters waving their little flags being like, we love America.
01:03:44.000You asked earlier, what do conservatives do when, uh, if they get fed up with the system and they, they lose confidence in the system and a positive thing that I've seen, I don't know if all of them are conservatives, people will say, you're not doing it.
01:03:57.000And they'll build systems that the government can't do like free software, social networks, things that are replicable among the masses without any kind of oversight.
01:04:10.000But it's not always a conservative person, but those are people that are willing to conserve the nature of reality.
01:04:14.000They're willing to make their own to keep things going.
01:04:18.000I'm happy to be a part of that movement by building mines, things like that, you know.
01:04:21.000Yeah, I think it is an interesting balance between people who have sort of a loyalty and maybe an optimism about what, I mean, that's the whole MAGA movement, right?
01:04:33.000Make America Great Again, versus the sort of very serious power of people who enjoy destruction.
01:04:41.000Like, if you don't believe in your country and you're willing to destroy it and see everything around you crumble, then you are actually in some ways more powerful because you don't feel the need to preserve anything.
01:04:50.000Preserving things is more difficult, in my opinion.
01:05:57.000But also, this is their mission in their life.
01:06:00.000Like, their community is a bunch of people who do sideshows and show up, and that's their culture.
01:06:05.000So that's, I would say that's the opposite of nihilism.
01:06:08.000There's many leftists who are nihilistic, and they're actually people who are like, I sat here and I thought about it, I couldn't find a reason to live, so screw it.
01:07:22.000I can't think of any other reason why we don't teach kids how to read or do math in school.
01:07:26.000I mean, if they're reliant on the government, that's a good thing for the left.
01:07:31.000But I do think that a lot of this is strategic and just trying to see how they can navigate in some of the cities maybe for what this summer looks like.
01:07:40.000You have dour predictions about the summer?
01:07:43.000You don't think it's going to be good?
01:07:44.000I think it's probably going to be violent.
01:07:46.000I mean, I think in like the Chicago area, you know, I mean, during the convention, I think we'll see some violence this summer, unfortunately.
01:08:23.000And so how do you talk about the future with your kids?
01:08:25.000I mean, in a positive manner, you know, and you're not going to fill your, you know, but my kids know what I do and they they're watching what's happening and the kids, you know, they see the news.
01:09:03.000There was a scandal, this was when I was in college, but there was, um, there were football players at University of Connecticut that couldn't read.
01:09:52.000follow orders like that's they turned 1920s or something that they've yeah I'm not gonna sit here and like defend the origins of public education or what it wanted to achieve I just think right now it's it's a really key piece and like you talk about the culture war Tim and about you know how do you win a culture where you engage in the culture and I think for a long time conservatives haven't engaged in some of these areas and so with the schools we have to engage because we'll lose our country eventually if we don't it doesn't matter what we do if the schools continue the way they are then You think it's because there's too many kids and there's not enough teachers?
01:10:24.000Shoving kids through without making sure they can read like they don't have enough attention.
01:10:27.000I think the problem is schools shouldn't exist.
01:10:31.000This is just poorly constructed organized like they just boring as hell.
01:10:36.000It should all be pod based schooling in this country should all be like every super small scale of like local parents taking turns like Farmhouse style kind of.
01:11:27.000You know, someone superchatted us, the reason why the boat crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge is because boomers weren't passing anything down to the next generation.
01:11:36.000It's one of the first generations, probably starting with the greatest generation actually, where, and maybe because of the war, that kids separated from their parents, just isolated.
01:11:49.000And then you get the first massive expansion of that with boomers, and typically the boomers are having millennial kids, but some younger Gen X and stuff like that.
01:11:59.000But these millennials, I mean, I think about how I grew up and all my friends grew up.
01:12:28.000Then they get older, and they're like, I don't wanna work, I don't wanna do anything.
01:12:31.000They don't know what their parents did, they don't know how to do anything related to finance, and they're left in their 20s, when they should be getting married and having kids, completely clueless as to how the world works.
01:12:43.000Yeah, my kids, well, I don't make them.
01:12:45.000They like to, they like to have money.
01:12:46.000And, you know, my son is very, uh, industrious young man.
01:12:50.000He started a window washing business and that was very good.
01:12:52.000So yeah, we, I mean, they like to have money and they, you know, we live in a place where they can kind of have a little bit of independence and we encourage that.
01:12:58.000How old were they when they started working?
01:13:00.000Um, well, my daughter started babysitting at like probably 11 or 12.
01:14:03.000Well, I mean, my issue with HB1 was that it was specifically focused on a couple apps, and it was for 15 and 14 year olds, no parental authorization included in it.
01:14:40.000So the other answer, which may be the better compromise, is that websites are required to ID verify if they're containing illicit materials.
01:14:50.000We need to assess whether or not social media is addictive and destructive like nicotine or any other substance.
01:14:58.000We know that Instagram, for instance, increases levels of depression.
01:15:02.000Or I should say, there are numerous studies that women develop, young girls get depressed.
01:15:07.000Less so boys, but young people generally experience social anxiety and depression because of likes and because of shares.
01:15:13.000They're not getting enough followers, things like that.
01:15:15.000And it's intentionally designed to be addictive.
01:15:17.000Ian actually can attest to this, having worked on Minds.com who founded it.
01:15:21.000Yeah, we had plenty of conversations about how addictive should we make it.
01:15:24.000And I thought, like, is 83% too unethical?
01:15:27.000I feel like that's really unethical to make it that addictive.
01:15:30.000I don't want to make it addictive, but then the company fails if it's not addictive, so you've got to make it addictive to get them to keep coming back.
01:15:34.000So we have a form of digital fentanyl, digital drugs, getting kids hooked and addicted.
01:15:40.000There's no ID requirements, so children can literally go into any app and download... I'm not just talking about porn.
01:15:47.000They can download snuff, and they can watch people get screwdrivers jammed into their skulls with hammers.
01:16:17.000They're very direct about what's included and how they're rated.
01:16:20.000And then on the internet, a kid can go on a website and watch a murder happen.
01:16:24.000So, instead of saying, let's do nothing, either we pull a big ask, which is, anyone under the age of 13 is banned from internet access, and of course they'll still find ways to get it, doesn't matter.
01:16:36.000Then we just hold responsible whoever was giving access, like if an adult gives a kid a snuff video, the adult gets in trouble.
01:16:41.000Then we can say, 14, 15, and 16 require some kind of parental approval for access, And then, or, we compromise and say, websites are required, if they're going to be presenting NC17 materials, to verify the notification of the individual absorbing those materials.
01:16:57.000Otherwise, they will be held criminally responsible.
01:16:59.000You're seeing age verification for pornography at 18.
01:17:02.000The issue with that bill for us, and for me, was really there was no parental authorization piece.
01:17:08.000And I'm really concerned about the government, what the government can and can't tell you to do with your kids.
01:17:12.000Right now, they're supporting kids getting healthy body parts cut off.
01:17:15.000And they'll tell you that they have a lot of studies that say that kids will kill themselves if you don't let them do that, right?
01:17:20.000And so I just kind of look at that and I want all of the policy to be really in service of fundamental rights, protecting our fundamental rights, certainly as a parent, that the government doesn't give you those rights.
01:17:30.000And then, you know, be in service of limited government.
01:17:33.000So I think there are a lot of questions to ask.
01:17:35.000I think because of tech accelerating so quickly that we need to be aware of all of the different ways it's touching our lives and try to have good policy because There's a real, I think that there's a real sense of urgency for people to start making legislation around this, but that can bring some really bad policy too.
01:17:53.000I think the challenging thing for us is that nobody, nobody wants to quit the drugs.
01:18:11.000Like things get really bad and they're like, I have to try and change this thing, which for teenagers, the cost of being addicted to the internet is high.
01:18:54.000So the issue I see with that is, when it comes to gambling, there are twelve casinos within two to three hours from where we are right now.
01:19:08.000People are going to keep voting to allow other people to engage in harmful, pleasurable, short-term activities until they disintegrate.
01:19:17.000I think your illusion or your metaphor with the internet and drugs is interesting and there are a lot of drugs on the internet in that way, your mental drugs, but I personally I feel like the internet is a greater boon than it is a drawback for society and that honestly in the future Our children are going to be the ones that build a better system, like Thomas Jefferson was 26.
01:19:35.000There's going to be some 14-year-olds in a chat room crafting a new constitution or amendments to the constitution, and they'll be giving... So if we ban them from the process of learning on the internet, that could be really, really... It would just really solidify the power structure that's already here and that wants to be here.
01:19:52.000And I have a lot of faith in the children of humanity, but I do believe guidance is necessary, and that's why I put that on the parents.
01:19:59.000I'd just like to see a lot more energy being put into the idea of supporting good parenting and working together.
01:20:07.000What age should a child get a cell phone?
01:20:09.000Again, the only way out is through, so let's have honest conversations about it.
01:20:16.000I spoke at an event about TikTok and I said, OK, parents, you can wait for the government to ban TikTok or you can just take it off your kid's phone.
01:20:23.000And then if I take it off and you take it off, then we're all mean together.
01:20:26.000But none of the kids have TikTok in our, even in your own small community.
01:21:18.000Once everyone's parents started joining, they were like, I don't want to be on this because now you're in college or you're in high school and your mom comments on this girl you're crushing on and she's like, it was so cute when he was a little baby.
01:22:01.000Well, it's a Chinese company, ByteDance, which is kind of beholden to the CCP, running a social network in our country with proprietary code.
01:23:00.000It's just about, I think, bringing awareness to Congress and letting them understand the idea of free software and open source code and verifying algorithms and things.
01:24:17.000Musk will be investigated for alleged intentional criminal instrumentalization of acts as part of an investigation into a network of people known as digital militias who allegedly spread defamatory fake news and threats against Supreme Court justices, according to the text of the decision.
01:24:31.000The new investigation will look into whether Musk engaged in obstruction, criminal organization, and incitement.
01:24:37.000So there's people on X that are apparently, allegedly, spreading mis- or disinformation about the justices of Brazil, the Supreme Court justices of Brazil.
01:24:45.000And so they want those people banned off X. And Elon's like, they're not saying anything illegal in the United States, which is where we're based.
01:25:33.000And, uh, they said that it was intentionally hateful and misgendering of a person, so it had to be pulled.
01:25:38.000And because Elon's like, I'm not gonna do it, they're finding Surge just reminded me that I had toilet paper in the shot the entire show, apparently.
01:27:10.000Not once in the two years I worked there did anything happen in any of the periphery of where I was working.
01:27:18.000The terminals next to me, on either side, and the flights I worked on, never did we get any word or witness anything related to door panels blowing off, or engine covers breaking off, or wheels breaking.
01:27:31.000There were sometimes maybe like a landing gear error of some sort.
01:28:26.000There were instances where you would see the metallic tape over hardware or whatever.
01:28:31.000That was normal, but it was never really indicative of anything.
01:28:33.000Some people would freak out, why is there duct tape on my plane?
01:28:35.000And we'd be like, that's like, it doesn't mean anything.
01:28:38.000Now we're getting all these crazy stories where doors blow off, landing gears are failing, we just had the engine cover blow off.
01:28:45.000Yeah, I think there's a problem with maintaining these planes.
01:28:47.000People are concerned from what I've heard and read and listened that People are concerned that DEI, you know, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, is getting people that are unqualified to come in here and build these things.
01:28:57.000And did you see that whistleblower that like, I don't know, a month ago when it was a Boeing, he was about to- He got shot.
01:29:03.000He was about to testify for Boeing and he had all this- He was in the middle of testifying.
01:29:06.000He'd been there for 30 years and he's like, it's not safe working conditions.
01:29:09.000Yeah, he was in the middle of testifying and he was about to sue Boeing too, I heard.
01:29:13.000Or he was in the process of litigating against them.
01:29:15.000He was doing his depositions and- I had maintained his whistleblower statements for years, and then in the middle of doing the depositions, he suddenly was no longer with us.
01:29:24.000And Boeing's military industrial complex all the way.
01:30:07.000Yeah, a couple that with no skilled workers, right, that can go, I mean, again, we're talking about only a third of kids reading on grade level.
01:30:13.000When you invite me on the show, Tim, I'm going to talk about education because it's a passion to me.
01:30:16.000I can't believe we're like condemning kids to a life of struggle and crime in third grade.
01:30:44.000Yeah, I think when possible, the pod schools, homeschooling, if you can do it and you can make that a priority in your lives.
01:30:51.000And for young people, if you're watching me and you're thinking to yourself, like, I don't know what to do, like figure out how you're going to have a family.
01:30:57.000And one of you is going to be able to be with the kids and to teach them, right?
01:31:01.000Don't get yourself into a situation where you can't do that.
01:31:03.000But in the public school system, it needs to be, you know, the Federal Department of Education needs to be dismantled and we need to put the power back down into the states where it should be.
01:31:14.000And the priority should be teaching kids to read.
01:31:15.000We should incentivize making sure that kids are learning to read, if nothing else.
01:31:29.000Because the baby listens to your voice and, you know, it's incredibly important to read to your kids because they learn a lot of words and that really will help them in their vocabulary later in life.
01:31:52.000It's a card game where you get four cards, you get to look at the outer two, and then you can't look at them again, and then you have to swap.
01:32:02.000It's a fun game, but it's kind of like a memory game.
01:32:04.000We play it with the kids, but Mark and I, my husband and I, will make a drink on a Friday night and play.
01:32:11.0003, and, uh, in Mario 3, sometimes the mushroom spawns, and if you go to the mushroom, you might get the game of memory, where if you match items, you get the item into your inventory.
01:32:23.000I remember this from my brother playing.
01:32:24.000And so, eventually, not only did we get good at the memory itself, where it's like, uh, actually, let me see if I can pull this up, so people get an understanding of it.
01:35:49.000I wanted to ask you, we're going to go to Super Chats pretty quick.
01:35:52.000Maybe we could talk about Moms4Liberty some more on the after show a little bit, because I know you're here in town to go speak.
01:35:56.000But what is it you're speaking for exactly, so people know on the main show, too?
01:35:59.000So, Weaponization of the Government Symposium at Heritage Foundation, where we'll talk about the fact that the American government is being used against the people.
01:36:09.000to control them and their actions and it's just pretty wild you have moms and dads across the country that get up at
01:36:14.000school board meetings and Their mics are being shut off and then they're being called
01:36:18.000domestic terrorists and the FBI is counting to count contacting them and it's shocking
01:36:22.000You know We whistleblowers that say they're supposed to be taking
01:36:25.000down license plate numbers of all the parents that are in the school board meeting
01:36:29.000That's crazy Well, let's go to super chats
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01:37:56.000So like the clothes that I have So if okay, so if you want to do just like a different shirt, I guess yeah, but if I'm totally talking about a different shirt We weren't saying like that shirt in white.
01:38:08.000Is that what I'm talking about thread count style?
01:38:12.000Oh, we were talking color but like to wear a white outfit is meaningless Well, this is a specific kind of shirt that has a thick like if I just wore like a white button-up I could buy that for a dollar Yeah.
01:38:26.000I see now why it's impossible to do this.
01:38:33.000If there was going to be a white beanie that comes from, I believe it's an empire, a white true classic shirt, a white Vulcan button up, And then I suppose if we're going, I'm wearing blue jeans, but you know, we only care.
01:41:14.000It's weird how that happens, but each break between the leaves acts like a pinhole camera, and you can see little eclipses all over the ground.
01:42:24.000Orange, purple, and green, like bursting from the sun.
01:42:29.000And so I was reading that for women only, because men don't have this, if you look at the clouds and you see like orange and purple lining the clouds, you are a tetrachromat, meaning you have a fourth rod and cone in your eye, and you can see more colors than other people.
01:42:44.000Only women, I believe only women have this.
01:42:46.000If men have the same mutation, they're actually colorblind.
01:42:49.000And so when I look- That's so interesting.
01:43:30.000It's basically just, like, triple layer of, like, film or something.
01:43:33.000And so you can look at the sun through the eclipse glasses and just see a little ball.
01:43:38.000But then when the eclipse happened, you could see it was pretty cool.
01:43:40.000And then we filled up a bucket, a bowl of water.
01:43:44.000And you could, it was still too bright to look at directly, but when you looked with the glasses at the bowl of water, you could see the rippling eclipse.
01:44:13.000Now we could realize, because it was like in the house, the lights on, you can tell what it's like at night versus the day when the sun's coming through, and it was like it was nighttime.
01:44:22.000But outside, when it was at 90% and the sun was totally covered, It was dark, you know?
01:44:29.000I really wanna know if the dogs run away.
01:44:31.000Like, all I heard today was like, keep your dog on a leash, keep your dog on a leash, the dog's gonna run away.
01:44:36.000I mean, is there a video, like, I haven't seen on the internet or anything, are there, like, have people been posting their animals freaking out?
01:44:41.000There's a video from a zoo where the animals are freaking out.
01:45:02.000They had a great ballot initiative there, Protect Kids CA, where they wanted to stop the use of puberty blockers on kids, stop boys playing in girls sports.
01:45:11.000I don't know if they're going to get the signatures for it this time, but it's nice to see blue states pushing back on some of this.
01:45:40.000And I'm like, And then you have like a lice outbreak in Georgia, and you have leprosy on the rise, and like all of these things are happening.
01:45:47.000And then I was like, and of course we have darkness.
01:45:49.000You could argue the three days of darkness was the wildfires.
01:45:52.000When the smog blotted out the sun and created a haze for several days.
01:48:05.000I think moms of kids who have vaccine injuries through the Children's Health Defense stuff he's done.
01:48:10.000You know, they, they, they are hopeful about him or they were, but our moms after that were pretty disappointed.
01:48:17.000It looks like, based on how his campaign is going and the kind of words he uses, he may intentionally be trying to pull votes from Democrats.
01:49:07.000When I started on the school board, I remember visiting a school and it had the kids signing in and it said auto-magically or something, and I was like, it's not even a word.
01:49:15.000Why do we have, like, a ridiculous... It was something ridiculous.
01:50:02.000YouMeInTheMovie says, the thing that shocks me the most about eclipses is that the moon is the perfect size and in the perfect distance to block the sun perfectly, evidence of the divine.
01:50:16.000The reason why people take the total solar eclipse so seriously is because there are other eclipses where it doesn't fit the sun.
01:50:22.000Like in October when we had the annular solar eclipse.
01:50:25.000That is, the moon is further away from the earth and then it doesn't completely block out the sun.
01:50:30.000Then you have the total eclipse which occurs only when it's in combination with the closest point to the earth where the moon is largest and in the right position over the sun to create that, to be fair, That still does create the circumstance where the moon is, what do they say, it's 400th the size of the sun and 400 times, 400th the distance?
01:51:49.000But, uh, eclipses happen every 18 months, and you can travel the world chasing them.
01:51:53.000Yeah, and there are people that do that.
01:51:55.000But to your point earlier, I mean, I was watching some news coverage of people in Arkansas.
01:51:59.000It really was lovely to see all these people had like their families out and the kids were there and, you know, different people had different reasons for going and experiencing it, but it was something they were all doing together and then they're all outside looking at it.
01:53:38.000Cal Miller says Trump needs to treat every state like they are swing states.
01:53:42.000If the plan to flip Texas-Missouri blue is true, then he needs to up his legal and campaign game.
01:53:48.000The reason why I think the Texas-Missouri thing is plausible is that Mike Cernovich said, it's not the reason that Mike Cernovich said this, but he makes a good point that the tactics used in 2020 will not work again for Trump.
01:55:03.000Morgan Thiel says, for intellectual consistency, I'm anti-abortion, but not pro-life, because I believe in capital punishment.
01:55:10.000Yeah, the editorial guideline we have for SCNR is that on issues of activism towards abortion or no abortion, it's not pro-life or pro-choice, because those are political names and brands.
01:55:56.000I guess that's why they don't call it an abortion.
01:55:57.000I don't know a lot of people who have that position, but... There's an old joke from the 90s that I can't say on YouTube that I'll save for the after show about that.
01:56:04.000There's a lot of jokes from the 90s that were mainstream and fun that you can't say on YouTube right now.
01:56:08.000It was a good time to grow up, though.
01:56:36.000Joe Spinell says, person means any individual, including any officer or employee of the federal government, or any group, entity, association, corporation, or foreign power.
01:58:04.000I was on like a metal, cold metal table and the really green light and dudes above me with masks looking down at me and the pain, the intense pain in my like lower abdomen.
01:59:52.000Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, and head over to TimCast.com, click join us, because this show is only possible with you guys as members.
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